Agrégateur de flux

La decima edizione del premio di laurea “Daniele Padovani”

Aldricus - lun, 01/25/2016 - 07:00

Anche quest’anno, la Società Italiana di Diritto Internazionale e di Diritto dell’Unione Europea (SIDI) indice il Premio di Laurea “Daniele Padovani” per la migliore tesi di laurea in materia di diritto internazionale privato e processuale.

L’ammissione al concorso è riservata ai candidati che abbiano conseguito una laurea specialistica o magistrale in giurisprudenza successivamente al 30 maggio 2014, con votazione non inferiore a 105.

Il termine per la presentazione delle domande è fissato al 4 marzo 2016.

Maggiori informazioni sono disponibili a questo indirizzo.

Separable, but not that separate. The Irish High Court in C&F Green Energy on settling applicable law as a preliminary issue.

GAVC - ven, 01/22/2016 - 07:07

The procedural context of C&F Green Energy v Bakker Magnetic BV is an attempt at making the courts preliminarily decide the isuse of applicable law to the contract between the parties. Gearóid Carey  explains the Irish civil procedure context here. In this posting I just want to flag one or two Rome I/II issues.

Plaintiffs (an Irish company), wind turbine manufacturers, seek declaratory relief and damages arising out of an alleged breach of contract and negligence on the part of the defendant in connection with the supply of magnets to the plaintiffs for use in the turbines. Defendant denies liability and has counterclaimed in respect of unpaid invoices and loss of profit.

The issue sought to be resolved at a preliminary hearing is whether it is Irish or Dutch law which governs the contract and should be applied by the court when the case comes on for full hearing. It was not for the High Court to determine the applicable law issue at this stage but rather to decide whether this crucial issue is to be decided at a preliminary hearing or whether it should be dealt with as one of the issues at the trial. Hedigan J decided it should be the latter. He dismissed i.a. the argument that much time will be saved because the parties will only have to prepare the case on the basis of one applicable law whatever the result of the preliminary issue, as ‘a little overblown’: expert opinion of one or two Dutch lawyers may be sought, however the facts of the case once the applicable law issue is settled, ought not to be overly complicated.

What interests me here is the ease with which, wrongly, the Court (however presumably just paraphrasing counsel at this point) applies the cascade or waterfall of Article 4 Rome I.  Parties’ views on applicable law are summarised in the judgment as follows: (at 5.2-5.3)

‘The defendant argues that the issue is a very discrete question of law relatively easily established. It argues that pursuant to Article 3.1 of the Rome I Regulation, a contract shall be governed by the law chosen by the parties. It argues that the defendant’s general conditions of sale were incorporated into the contract because of their attachment to a series of quotations delivered by email and their inclusion in their order confirmation forms. Thus, Dutch law was chosen by the parties to govern their contract. It argues that if they succeed on this point then little remains to be decided because certain clear time limits will apply and these, they claim, have clearly not been met….

The plaintiffs argue that it is not Article 3 but Article 4(3) of the Rome I Regulation that should apply. This Article provides that it is the law of the country most closely connected to the contract that shall apply. Although Article 4 provides for the applicable law only in the absence of a choice of law, the plaintiff argues that this Article will fall to be considered if they can establish that the orders for the goods were not, in fact, made subject to the condition importing Dutch law. In this regard, they characterised the emails relied upon by the defendant as merely pre-contract correspondence. They will rely upon the evidence of the parties to demonstrate that Dutch law was never accepted as the law of the contract. They will argue that the choice of law should be determined pursuant to Article 4(3) by an examination of all the numerous connections between the contract and Ireland. This, they argue, will involve a consideration of all the evidence of the negotiations that took place between the parties. In relation to their claim in tort, they argue that the general rule under Rome II Article 4(1)(i) should apply i.e. the law of the country where the damage occurred. They argue that Article 4(3) of Rome II further brings into play evidence as to manifest proximity. Both of these, they argue, will involve evidence of the parties.’

Which of these will prevail will now be settled at trial stage. Defendant will have to show that what it refers to as the pre-contractual quotations of its general conditions of sale, seemingly by e-mails and eventually in the confirmation forms, amounts to a choice of law clearly established, per Article 3(1) Rome I.  There is considerable case-law on the mirror issue of choice of Court under Brussels I, also in an e-mail context (see e.g. here) however  to what degree one can simply apply the same principles to choice of law, is not clearly established in case-law.

An interesting point is that the Court (and counsel with it, one presumes) jumps straight to Article 4(3) Rome I should choice of law per Article 3(1 not be clearly established. Article 4(3) however is the escape clause (referred to by Hedigan J as ‘manifest proximity’), which must only apply in exceptional circumstance. The correct next steps following failure to establish clearly established choice of law, are firstly the assumptions made under Article 4(1)  (Article 4(1) (a) would seem most obvious here); should that fail, Article 4(2)’s characteristic performance test; and failing that, Article 4(4)s ‘proper law of the contract’ consideration. Article 4(3) only corrects Article 4(1) or (2)s more mechanical (‘objective’ as it is also called) choice of law determination. The judgment mixes Article 4(3)’s ultimate and exceptional correction, with the proper law of the contract test.

My concerns here should likewise not be overblown. Actual determination of the applicable law was not the court’s task. However now that the issue goes back to trial, correct application of Rome I must be made.

Geert.

The ECJ to clarify the notion of “establishment” of the defendant for the purposes of Regulation No 207/2009 on the Community trade mark

Aldricus - ven, 01/22/2016 - 07:00

The Oberlandesgericht of Düsseldorf has recently lodged a request for a preliminary ruling concerning the interpretation of Article 97(1) of Regulation No 207/2009 on the Community trade mark (Case C-617/15, Hummel Holding). Specifically, the request concerns the meaning of the term “establishment” as used in the Regulation.

According to Article 97(1), proceedings in respect of the actions and claims referred to in Article 96 — ie infringement actions, actions for declaration of non-infringement etc. — “shall be brought in the courts of the Member State in which the defendant is domiciled or, if he is not domiciled in any of the Member States, in which he has an establishment”.

The facts of the case may be summarised as follows. The applicant, a Danish company, sues a German company before a German court, alleging that the latter has infringed its Community trade mark. The defendant complains that German courts lack jurisdiction, relying on the circumstance that the German company is a subsidiary of a Dutch company, which is itself a subsidiary of an American holding company.

In connection with the foregoing, the Oberlandesgericht asks the ECJ to clarify “(u)nder which circumstances is a legally distinct second-tier subsidiary, with its seat in an EU Member State, of an undertaking that itself has no seat in the European Union to be considered as an ‘establishment’ of that undertaking within the meaning of Article 97(1)” of the Regulation.

Transports aériens : exigibilité de la TVA sur les billets d’avions achetés mais non utilisés

La Cour de justice de l’Union européenne confirme, dans un arrêt du 23 décembre 2015, l’exigibilité de la TVA sur les billets d’avion non utilisés et non remboursables de la compagnie aérienne Air France-KLM. 

En carrousel matière:  Non Matières OASIS:  Néant

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Catégories: Flux français

Call for papers: A conference in Santiago de Compostela on Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation

Conflictoflaws - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 13:00

This post has been written by Ilaria Aquironi.

On 15 April 2016 the Law Faculty of the University of Santiago del Compostela will host an international conference on Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation: from Conflicts of Laws towards Harmonization. The event is part of the Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation Project.

Speakers include Paul Beaumont (Univ. of Aberdeen), Francisco Garcimartín Alferez (Univ. Autonoma of Madrid), Juana Pulgar Esquerra (Univ. Complutense of Madrid) and Anna Veneziano (Unidroit).

With a view to promote scientific debate on the topic, a call for papers has been issued. The organizers will consider papers addressing, in particular: (a) Security Rights, Set-Off, Transactional Avoidance and Conflict-of-Laws Issues; (b) Security Rights and Insolvency Law in National Legislation, in particular taking into account the New Approach to Business Failure and Insolvency as proposed by the 2014 European Commission Recommendation; (c) Harmonization Trends at an international level.

Submissions should be sent by 11 March 2016 either to Marta Carballo Fidalgo (marta.carballo@usc.es) or to Laura Carballo Piñeiro (laura.carballo@usc.es).

Further information about the project is available here. The call for papers can be downloaded here.

Article 537 du code de procédure pénale

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Pourvoi c/ juridiction de proximité de Longjumeau, 1e et 4e classe, 24 novembre 2015

Catégories: Flux français

Article L. 624-16 du Code de commerce

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Pourvoi c/ Cour d'appel de Paris, pôle 5, chambre 9, 11 décembre 2014

Catégories: Flux français

Article L. 218-28 du code de l'environnement

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Cour d'appel d'Aix en Provence, 13e chambre, 8 janvier 2016

Catégories: Flux français

Article L. 1235-16 du code du travail

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Conseil de Prud'hommes de Troyes, 13 janvier 2016

Catégories: Flux français

L. 1245-1 et L. 5134-47 du code du travail

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Pourvoi c/ Cour d'appel de Besançon, chambre sociale, 3 juin 2014

Catégories: Flux français

Articles 877, alinéa 2, 885, alinéas 1 et 2 et 888 du code de procédure pénale

Cour de cassation française - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 12:15

Pourvoi c/ Cour d'assises de Mayotte, 1er décembre 2015

Catégories: Flux français

4/2016 : 21 janvier 2016 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-515/14

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 10:01
Commission / Chypre
Libre circulation des personnes
La législation chypriote sur les droits à la retraite, qui désavantage les travailleurs migrants par rapport à ceux qui ne se déplacent pas de Chypre, est contraire au droit de l’Union

Catégories: Flux européens

Call for papers: A conference in Santiago de Compostela on Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation

Aldricus - jeu, 01/21/2016 - 07:00

On 15 April 2016 the Law Faculty of the University of Santiago del Compostela hosts an international conference on Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation: from Conflicts of Laws towards Harmonization. The event is part of the Security Rights and the European Insolvency Regulation Project.

Speakers include Paul Beaumont (Univ. of Aberdeen), Francisco Garcimartín Alferez (Univ. Autonoma of Madrid), Juana Pulgar Esquerra (Univ. Complutense of Madrid) and Anna Veneziano (Unidroit).

With a view to promote scientific debate on the topic, a call for papers has been issued. The organizers will consider papers addressing, in particular: (a) Security Rights, Set-Off, Transactional Avoidance and Conflict-of-Laws Issues; (2) Security Rights and Insolvency Law in National Legislation, in particular taking into account the New Approach to Business Failure and Insolvency as proposed by the 2014 European Commission Recommendation; (3) Harmonization Trends at an international level.

Submissions should be sent by 11 March 2016 either to Marta Carballo Fidalgo (marta.carballo@usc.es) or to Laura Carballo Piñeiro (laura.carballo@usc.es).

Further information about the project is available here. The call for papers can be downloaded here.

L’avocat général en faveur de la nouvelle législation européenne des produits du tabac

Dans ses conclusions rendues le 23 décembre 2015, l’avocat général de la Cour de justice de l’Union européenne (CJUE), Juliane Kokott, juge licite la nouvelle législation européenne visant à rapprocher les dispositions législatives, réglementaires et administratives des États membres concernant les produits du tabac.

En carrousel matière:  Oui Matières OASIS:  Santé publique

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Catégories: Flux français

3/2016 : 20 janvier 2016 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-428/14

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - mer, 01/20/2016 - 09:51
DHL Express (Italy) et DHL Global Forwarding (Italy)
Concurrence
En matière de concurrence, les programmes de clémence de l’Union et des États membres coexistent de façon autonome

Catégories: Flux européens

La Serbia aderisce alla Convenzione dell’Aja del 1996 sulla protezione dei minori

Aldricus - mer, 01/20/2016 - 07:00

Il 15 gennaio 2016 la Serbia ha depositato il proprio strumento di adesione alla Convenzione dell’Aja del 19 ottobre 1996 sulla competenza, la legge applicabile, l’efficacia delle decisioni e la cooperazione in materia di responsabilità genitoriale e di misure di protezione dei minori.

La Convenzione, che è in vigore per altri 42 Stati, fra cui l’Italia (dal 1° gennaio 2016: si veda questo post), entrerà in vigore per la Serbia il 1° novembre 2016, conformemente a quanto previsto all’art. 61, par. 2, lett. b), della Convenzione stessa.

Questo lungo lasso di tempo si spiega alla luce dell’art. 58, par. 3, della Convenzione, il quale stabilisce che per gli Stati a cui è data la possibilità di aderire alla Convenzione (tutti gli Stati che non erano membri della Conferenza dell’Aja all’epoca dell’adozione del testo), l’adesione è efficace solo nei riguardi di quegli Stati contraenti che non abbiano obiettato all’adesione nei sei mesi successivi alla notifica della stessa.

2/2016 : 19 janvier 2016 - Arrêts du Tribunal dans les affaires T-404/12, T-409/12

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - mar, 01/19/2016 - 09:53
Toshiba / Commission
Concurrence
Le Tribunal confirme les amendes de 131 millions d’euros infligées à Toshiba et Mitsubishi Electric pour leur participation à l’entente sur le marché des appareillages de commutation à isolation gazeuse

Catégories: Flux européens

La distinzione tra diritto pubblico e diritto privato e il conflitto di leggi

Aldricus - mar, 01/19/2016 - 07:00

Clotilde Camus, La distinction du droit public et du droit privé et le conflit de lois, L.G.D.J., 2015, ISBN: 9782275047676, pp. 396, Euro 45.

[Dal sito dell’editore] – Cette étude a pour objet d’analyser les implications des mutations de la distinction du droit public et du droit privé pour le droit international privé, et plus particulièrement pour le conflit de lois. En effet, dans la mesure où l’on enseigne traditionnellement que la méthode du conflit de lois prend pour point de départ la summa divisio, ses transformations influencent nécessairement le conflit de lois.  Plus précisément, cette recherche est fondée sur le constat de la résistance de la distinction du droit public et du droit privé, en dépit des remises en cause récurrentes dont elle fait l’objet. Quand bien même son tracé et son rôle évoluent sans cesse, elle ne nous semble pas avoir perdu sa raison d’être, tant que subsiste la res publica. Il nous a dès lors paru pertinent de transposer à la summa divisio la formule de Maurice Hauriou relative à l’existence de la juridiction administrative : «c’est peine perdue de la discuter ; au contraire, il faut en accepter la donnée et en observer le jeu».  L’observation du jeu de la distinction du droit public et du droit privé nous a conduit à analyser ses mutations à partir de trois paradigmes – libéral, post-étatique et constitutionnel -, chacun éclairant sous un jour particulier l’opposition du droit public et du droit privé. Il a alors fallu étudier au sein de chacun de ces trois paradigmes l’influence de ces évolutions sur le conflit de lois.

L’indice completo è consultabile al seguente indirizzo. Maggiori informazioni sono disponibili sul sito dell’editore.

Caractérisation du délit de traite des êtres humains

Prive sa décision de justification la cour d’appel qui, après avoir constaté que l’achat d’une mineure avait pour finalité de la contraindre à commettre des vols, relaxe le prévenu du chef du délit de traite des êtres humains.

En carrousel matière:  Oui Matières OASIS:  Traite des êtres humains

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Catégories: Flux français

Ecobank Transnational v Tanoh: Parallel application of EU and English rules on submission.

GAVC - lun, 01/18/2016 - 07:07

In Ecobank Transnational v Tanoh, the Court of Appeal refused an anti-enforcement injunction because of the applicant’s delay in filing it. Nigel Brook reviews the judgment’s findings on the issue of the anti-enforcement injunction here. The issue in this appeal is whether the High Court was wrong to refuse to grant Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (“Ecobank”), an injunction restraining Mr Thierry Tanoh (“Mr Tanoh”) from enforcing two judgments which he had obtained in Togo and Côte d’Ivoire. In substance the case concerned the relationship between arbitration, proceedings in the court in ordinary, and submission: it is to the latter that I turn my attention in this posting.

The Brussels regime does not apply – at stake is the application of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982, which reads in relevant section

33 For the purposes of determining whether a judgment given by a court of an overseas country should be recognised or enforced in England and Wales or Northern Ireland, the person against whom the judgment was given shall not be regarded as having submitted to the jurisdiction of the court by reason only of the fact that he appeared (conditionally or otherwise) in the proceedings for all or any one or more of the following purposes, namely

(a) to contest the jurisdiction of the court;

(b) to ask the court to dismiss or stay the proceedings on the ground that the dispute in question should be submitted to arbitration or to the determination of the courts of another country.

Whilst the section states that a person shall not be regarded as having submitted by reason only of the facts there mentioned it is silent as to what additional facts are sufficient to establish submission. The Court of appeal confirms the feeling expressed in earlier case-law that Section 33 needs to be applied in parallel with Article 18 of the Brussels Convention, now Article 26 of the Brussels I Recast (and before that, Article 24 in the Brussels I Regulation). That is because Section 33 is largely derived from Article 18 of the Brussels Convention.

In the High Court judgment Burnton LJ said that it would be unfortunate if the principles applied by the courts of England and Wales on whether a litigant had submitted to the jurisdiction of a foreign court in non-EU cases were different from the principles applied by the Court of Justice, and therefore those courts, in cases under the Brussels and Lugano Conventions and now the Judgments Regulation.

In current appeal, Clarke LJ held (at 66) ‘I would go further. The decision of the court in Harada in relation to section 33 was heavily influenced by the decision of the European Court in relation to Article 18 of the Brussels Convention. But, now that section 33 has been interpreted in the way that it has, it cannot be right that it should bear a different meaning in cases outwith the European context.

Submission was not found to exist.

Do be aware of the limits to the relevant findings: Section 33 was largely borrowed, it appears, from the Brussels Convention. Many parts of English private international law, statutory or not, are no so borrowed. In those areas, the courts of England happily continue to follow their own course.

Geert.

 

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